The difference between capitalism and socialism explained through Mercedes

I was filling up my Mercedes oil when a man approached me and he said, "Do you know how many people you could feed on the money car cost you? So says the storyteller of a video that has become viral. His answer begins to attract the reader's attention and gives a very much explanation [...]
I was filling up my Mercedes oil when a man approached me and he said, "Do you know how many people you could feed on the money car cost you? So says the storyteller of a video that has become viral.
His answer begins to attract the reader's attention and gives a very clear and Cucciz explanation that differentiates capitalism from socialism.
I answered: No, I don't know. But I know I fed a lot of families in Stuttgart, Germany, where they were made. I fed in Japan where tires were made, in Guanajuato, Mexico, where workers produced interior parts in Chile, where miners mined copper for electric cables. I've fed the people who made trucks to transport copper and truck drivers. I fed the farmers who sold their seatskins, the seller who served me very kindly, even the cleaning men in the sales room. I have also fed on paying taxes, with which the government pays the salaries of police, teachers, and civil servants. My husband kept silent, turned his back on me, and left, says the videoteller.
This is the difference between capitalism and socialism. When you buy something, you put money in the bags of a lot of people and it dignifies you because they made something and it gives you value. This money moves the economy, far different from what happens in socialism that produces a poor world. When you give money to someone in exchange for nothing, you steal dignity and self-esteem. This free money produces nothing, destroys the capacity of fulfillment. Capitalism is to give money you earn in return for something you value. Socialism is when you get your money to give free to someone who for the most part has done nothing to deserve, the confessor. / world.al












